Saturday, December 30, 2006

"An Opossum in My Closet!"

I thought it was a serendipitous bonanza the other day when I called customer support and was connected to a computer technician, Greg, who not only spoke English as a first language, but also seemed able to immediately identify and solve my computer woes.

“I know exactly what the problem is,” he said confidently. “I’m going to order you a part, so we can get this working for you, and then…I’m going to tell you your choice of three jokes, free of charge!” Though it seemed unusual, it was a far better deal than my previous calls to get some resolution for the problem, when I was connected to someone named Lakshman or Vijay who lives 13 time zones away from me. In those cases, I would end up totally frustrated when they didn’t understand me as I tried to describe the computer problems, and I couldn’t understand their instructions because of their modest English. And it was even more exasperating when more than once I was inexplicably cut off after spending close to an hour on the phone with no progress made on the computer problem.

Greg did speak with a Southern drawl, but he was totally understandable as he asked for some information, and arranged for a house call. “Now, for the joke,” he continued. “Do you want to hear about the opossum in the closet, the panda bear, or the cowboy in Starbucks?” I was flush with the satisfaction of the quick and easy computer problem solution, and willing to humor him.

I picked the opossum, and Greg informed me that it was not so much a joke as a true funny story that had happened to him when he was sixteen. Indeed, he artfully spun a colorful tale of a hissing possum that had crawled up under his house and in through a vent of some kind into his bedroom closet. There was no punch line, but he seemed to derive great glee from imitating the animal’s snarling teeth baring, and describing his efforts to safely remove it from the house. I chuckled politely, and thanked him for his help with my computer, and for the free entertainment.

Two days later, the local computer technician, Albert, showed up at my door, ready to follow through with Greg’s promise of a sure-fire fix. Now this was service. Three hours later, Albert left, as frustrated with my computer as I have been…and with the computer problem still vexing me. Somehow, though, I’m not the least peeved with Greg, even though he didn’t end up being any more help than unintelligible Vijay. Greg didn’t solve my problem, but his Southern charm soothed my pique. And maybe in some needle in a haystack chance, when I call customer support again, I’ll get Greg, and he’ll tell me the joke about the cowboy in Starbucks.


Comments:
....Pass on "Cowboy at Starbucks"... you should already know "Panda"...the best advice: GET A MAC!
 
Your entire problem is Windows. Get Linux! It will solve all your hardware and software problems.
 
Yes, I’d say such a customer service representative is essentially a needle in a haystack. I fear, however, that calling customer service lines will only become more frustrating with the trend of outsourcing. One thing is for sure – I would sooner use an abacus than purchase a MAC for my computing needs.
 
I'll hand deliver my old abacus next time you need customer support. :-)
 
Point well taken. I'll concede that I'd probably get as far with the abacus as I would with customer service! :-) Perhaps the MAC's latest television advertising campaign (young, hip guy = MAC; old, nerdy guy = PC) annoyed me to the point of making my rash anti-MAC comment! Or, maybe I made the comment because I have MAC-envy and I'm in denial... In any event, I certainly didn't intend to denigrate any MAC users! :-)
 
Why do so many people prefer Macs? I would hate to have to switch all my software over. I couldn't afford to, actually. And it's always harder to find stuff for it, it seems...
 
MACS are dependable and user-friendly. I have in my classroom six MACS (mainly eMacs) that have been pounded on daily for five+ years - including one dinosaur that is so old that the tech repair guy had never seen one like it. (Apple IIe - circa 1986) My Kindergarten Kidlets love the alphabet programs on the (really) floppy discs so much that I don't ever want to give the IIe up. As a contrast, my new, top-of-the-line, PC laptop was unrepairable after less than two years of light home use.
Love them or hate them - Cheers!
dr
 
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